vm86_trap() to return to the calling program directly. vm86_trap()
doesn't return, thus it was never returning to trap() to release
Giant. Thus, release Giant before calling vm86_trap().
struct swblock entries by dividing the number of the entries by 2
until the swap metadata fits.
- Reject swapon(2) upon failure of swap_zone allocation.
This is just a temporary fix. Better solutions include:
(suggested by: dillon)
o reserving swap in SWAP_META_PAGES chunks, and
o swapping the swblock structures themselves.
Reviewed by: alfred, dillon
variables from i386 assembly language. The syntax is PCPU(member)
where member is the capitalized name of the per-cpu variable, without
the gd_ prefix. Example: movl %eax,PCPU(CURPROC). The capitalization
is due to using the offsets generated by genassym rather than the symbols
provided by linking with globals.o. asmacros.h is the wrong place for
this but it seemed as good a place as any for now. The old implementation
in asnames.h has not been removed because it is still used to de-mangle
the symbols used by the C variables for the UP case.
of explicit calls to lockmgr. Also provides macros for the flags
pased to specify shared, exclusive or release which map to the
lockmgr flags. This is so that the use of lockmgr can be easily
replaced with optimized reader-writer locks.
- Add some locking that I missed the first time.
the witness code is compiled in. Without this, the witness code doesn't
notice that sched_lock is released by fork_trampoline() and thus gets all
confused about spin lock order later on.
held and panic if so (conditional on witness).
- Change witness_list to return the number of locks held so this is easier.
- Add kern/syscalls.c to the kernel build if witness is defined so that the
panic message can contain the name of the offending system call.
- Add assertions that Giant and sched_lock are not held when returning from
a system call, which were missing for alpha and ia64.
- Move PCI core code to dev/pci.
- Split bridge code out into separate modules.
- Remove the descriptive strings from the bridge drivers. If you
want to know what a device is, use pciconf. Add support for
broadly identifying devices based on class/subclass, and for
parsing a preloaded device identification database so that if
you want to waste the memory, you can identify *anything* we know
about.
- Remove machine-dependant code from the core PCI code. APIC interrupt
mapping is performed by shadowing the intline register in machine-
dependant code.
- Bring interrupt routing support to the Alpha
(although many platforms don't yet support routing or mapping
interrupts entirely correctly). This resulted in spamming
<sys/bus.h> into more places than it really should have gone.
- Put sys/dev on the kernel/modules include path. This avoids
having to change *all* the pci*.h includes.
calling the C functions mtx_enter_hard() and mtx_exit_hard() clobbers them.
Note that %eax is also not call safe, but it is already clobbered due to
cmpxchg. However, now we are back to not compiling again, so these macros
are still left disabled for now.
that of MTX_EXIT. Don't assume that the reg parameter to MTX_ENTER
holds curproc, load it explicitly. Put semi-colons at the end of
the macros to be more consistent and so its harder to forget them
when these change.
SMP problem. Compaq, in their infinite wisdom, forgot to put the IO apic
intpin #0 connection to the 8259 PIC into the mptable. This hack is to
look and see if intpin #0 has *no* table entry and adds a fake ExtInt
entry for the remap routines to use. isa/clock.c will still test the
interrupts. This entry is only ever used on an already broken system.
mpapic.c. This gives us the benefit of C type checking. These functions
are not called in any critical paths and are not used by the interrupt
routines.
spending, which was unused now that all software interrupts have
their own thread. Make the legacy schednetisr use an atomic op
for setting bits in the netisr mask.
Reviewed by: jhb
Also, while here, run up to 32 interrupt sources on APIC systems.
Normalize INTREN/INTRDIS so they are the same on both UP and SMP systems
rather than sometimes a macro, and sometimes a function.
Reviewed by: jhb, jakeb
MPLOCKED macro
(2) Use decimal 12 rather than hex 0xc in an addl
(3) Implement MTX_ENTER for the I386_CPU case
(4) Use semi-colons between instructions to allow MTX_ENTER
and MTX_ENTER_WITH_RECURSION to be assembled
(5) Use incl instead of incw to increment the recusion count
(6) 10 is not a valid label, use 7, 8 and 9 rather than 8, 9 and 10
(7) Sort numeric labels
Submitted by: bde (2, 4, and 5)
pushl that of the new process, rather than doing a movl (%esp) and
assuming that the stack has been setup right. This make the initial
stack setup slightly more sane, and will make it easier to stick
an interrupted process onto the run queue without its knowing.
process is on the alternate stack or not. For compatibility
with sigstack(2) state is being updated if such is needed.
We now determine whether the process is on the alternate
stack by looking at its stack pointer. This allows a process
to siglongjmp from a signal handler on the alternate stack
to the place of the sigsetjmp on the normal stack. When
maintaining state, this would have invalidated the state
information and causing a subsequent signal to be delivered
on the normal stack instead of the alternate stack.
PR: 22286
-current and RELENG_4 with GENERIC.
NKPT is the number of initial bootstrap page table pages we create for
the kernel during startup. Once VM is up, we resize it as needed, but
with 4G ram, the size of the vm_page_t structures was pushing it over
the limit. The fact that trimmed down kernels boot on 4G ram machines
suggests that we were pretty close to the edge.
The "30" is arbitary, but smaller than the 'nkpt' variable on all
machines that I checked.
timeout. If DIAGNOSTIC is turned on, then display a message to the console
with a map of which CPUs failed to stop or restart. This gives an SMP box
at least a fighting chance of getting into DDB if one of the other CPUs has
interrupts disabled.
counter register in-CPU.
This is to be used as a fast "timer", where linearity is more important
than time, and multiple lines in the linearity caused by multiple CPUs
in an SMP machine is not a problem.
This adds no code whatsoever to the FreeBSD kernel until it is actually
used, and then as a single-instruction inline routine (except for the
80386 and 80486 where it is some more inline code around nanotime(9).
Reviewed by: bde, kris, jhb
- Use the mutex in hardclock to ensure no races between it and
softclock.
- Make softclock be INTR_MPSAFE and provide a flag,
CALLOUT_MPSAFE, which specifies that a callout handler does not
need giant. There is still no way to set this flag when
regstering a callout.
Reviewed by: -smp@, jlemon
may block on a mutex while on the sleep queue without corrupting
it.
- Move dropping of Giant to after the acquire of sched_lock.
Tested by: John Hay <jhay@icomtek.csir.co.za>
jhb
instead of DIAGNOSTIC.
- Remove the p_wchan check as it no longer applies since a process may be
switched out during CURSIG() within msleep() or mawait().
- Remove an extra sanity check only needed during the early SMPng work.
acquire Giant as needed in functions that call mi_switch(). The releases
need to be done outside of the sched_lock to avoid potential deadlocks
from trying to acquire Giant while interrupts are disabled.
Submitted by: witness
sched_lock. This is needed for kernel threads that are created before
interrupts are enabled. kthreads created by kld's that are created at
SI_SUB_KLD such as the random kthread.
Tested by: phk